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Clinical Trials/NCT02361151
NCT02361151
Completed
Not Applicable

Enhancing Parent-Child Communication and Promoting Physical Activity and Healthy Eating Through Mobile Technology: the mFIT Study (Motivating Families With Interactive Technology)

University of South Carolina1 site in 1 country200 target enrollmentFebruary 2015
ConditionsObesity

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Obesity
Sponsor
University of South Carolina
Enrollment
200
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Bouts of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (via accelorometers)
Status
Completed
Last Updated
7 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The high rates of childhood obesity in the US demand innovative and cost-effective weight gain prevention tools; mobile applications (apps) represent one such solution. Using a randomized design, the mFIT study tests the effectiveness of using commercially available apps and a physical activity (PA) monitoring device (Tech, n=50 parent-child dyads) compared to the apps and PA device plus a mobile website and theory-based family intervention that encourages increased parent-child communication about PA and healthy eating as well as family behavior change (Tech+, n=50 parent-child dyads).

Detailed Description

Objectives and Significance. Finding scalable and engaging ways to disseminate obesity treatment and prevention for children has been challenging. Mobile applications (apps) are an engaging way to involve children in health behavior changes, capitalizing on the portability and affordability of delivering health information via mobile devices and the opportunity to use gaming to make health information entertaining. Previous research by our team, including a systematic review of commercially available mobile apps for family weight loss, physical activity, and healthy eating as well as a pilot test of commercially available apps and physical activity monitoring devices with parent-child dyads, revealed significant gaps in the available mobile tools. The proposed study will test the effectiveness of using commercially available apps and a physical activity monitoring device (Tech) compared to the apps and physical activity device plus a mobile website and theory-based family intervention that encourages increased parent-child communication about physical activity and healthy eating and family behavior change (Tech+). The two programs will be administered remotely via email, mobile apps, and a mobile website to parent-child dyads (child 9-12 years old), using over a 3-month intervention period. Parent-child dyads will be randomized to the two behavioral interventions: Tech (50 dyads) or Tech+ (50 dyads). Our proposed research has two aims: Aim 1: Test the effectiveness of an evidence-based mobile intervention with enhanced parent/child communication (Tech+) versus commercially available products (physical activity and healthy eating apps, physical activity device) alone (Tech) for improvements in physical activity and healthy eating in parents and children. Aim 2: Examine the impacts of evidence-based family intervention on parent-child relationship quality and communication about physical activity and healthy eating.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
February 2015
End Date
December 2015
Last Updated
7 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Brie Turner-McGrievy

Advisor

University of South Carolina

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Participants must include 1 child (age 9-12) and their parent or guardian
  • Parent not currently meeting physical activity guidelines (participants will be eligible if they currently engage in aerobic activities for less than 2 hours and 30 minutes/week and strength training \<2 days/week)
  • Own and use a smartphone and/or a tablet with a data plan (e.g., iPhone, iPad)
  • Live in the same household as the child
  • Are willing to be randomized to one of the two intervention groups
  • Willing and able to be physically active

Exclusion Criteria

  • Has a psychiatric disease, drug or alcohol dependency, or uncontrolled thyroid condition
  • Has an eating disorder
  • Currently participating in a weight loss program or taking weight loss medications
  • Has a major chronic diseases, including: heart disease, past incidence of stroke, uncontrolled diabetes

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Bouts of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (via accelorometers)

Time Frame: 12 weeks

Study Sites (1)

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